Do you want welfare or not?
Do you want debt or not?
Start your essays.
Do you want welfare or not?
Do you want debt or not?
avoiding suffering = good
not dying of suffocation = goodbreathing = bad
A poor analogy.
because breathing is bad?If your argument is that good+bad=bad necessarily, then breathing is a counterexample.
I would say that things with good and bad effects can sometimes be bad
because breathing is bad?
The effect of violating rights is war and anarchy.
because breathing is bad?Because breathing isn't bad, despite technically having a bad effect. Breathing releases CO2, but sometimes you take the bad with the good.
The effect of violating rights is war and anarchy.Sometimes. Probably not always. I don't know that tickling someone without their consent would lead to war and anarchy.
And if taxes didn't exist, you would just have anarchy anyway.
Good can outweigh evil for the same choice, but when the evil is the violation of other's rights the cost is social morality itself.
The possibility of domination and forgiveness are temporal offsets that do not change the grand causality.
And if taxes didn't exist, you would just have anarchy anyway.That is false.
Good can outweigh evil for the same choice, but when the evil is the violation of other's rights the cost is social morality itself.Contributing to global warming violates everyone's rights (by a tiny amount).
Increased education generally reduces the chances of terrorism and gang violence, for example.
And if taxes didn't exist, you would just have anarchy anyway.That is false.Anarchy generally means "no government."
That's what anarchists advocate for, anyway.
I don't think we could have a government (or something recognizable as a government) without taxes.
Let's imagine a class of actions which in some small way contribute to an event which constitutes an attack on the liberty of others. The normal rules of causality and reasonableness would apply here. If the contribution to the damage can be quantified then only those furtherances which constitute a significant chance of being "the final straw" could be considered intentional attacks.
The carbon dioxide an animal breathes out is part of a closed carbon cycle. You don't breathe out any carbon that wasn't captured from the atmosphere or biosphere first.
Carbon dioxide is cooling the planet, it does not contribute to global warming
A (slightly) warmer planet is not a planet with less quality of life
Only teaching a man morals will keep him from attacking anyone except in the defense of liberty.
The only answer that has the slightest validity to that question has been the freeloader problem. Solve the freeloader problem in other ways
This would require quantifying what the threshold is for a "significant chance".
We could say something similar about driving cars despite the minor risk of hitting a pedestrian.
The carbon dioxide an animal breathes out is part of a closed carbon cycle. You don't breathe out any carbon that wasn't captured from the atmosphere or biosphere first.Sure, that's true. But it does not negate the fact that you are breathing out carbon, which does have negative effects on the environment.
Carbon dioxide is cooling the planet, it does not contribute to global warmingIt cools some parts of the planet,
but it correlates positively with global warming overall [source].
And measuring net impacts instead of focusing on just negative impacts seems a lot like saying the ends can justify the means in certain circumstances.
Only teaching a man morals will keep him from attacking anyone except in the defense of liberty.A lot of schools do teach morals. Many of them have units on genocide.
The only answer that has the slightest validity to that question has been the freeloader problem. Solve the freeloader problem in other waysIf we slashed all taxes tomorrow, how would anarchy be avoided?
We'd need an immediate solution.
Has the freeloader problem been solved on a large enough scale in some country that we would not consider that place to be living in anarchy?
Even then, my issue isn't lack of alternatives as much as it is that taxes have funded things that have been shown to reduce disorder
If your threshold for anarchy is such that you don't consider a bunch of independent warring clans to be anarchy, then maybe that's an alternative.
There's one example where slashing all government functions has been tried and failed [source]
and no large-scale success stories that come to mind. This will of course depend on what you consider success. A society with loose authority and 1800s living standards would probably be considered anarchy by most people today.
The means isn't a violation of rights. Taking a risk or doing something that could accumulate to a violation of rights is not a violation of rights regardless of the scale of that accumulation or risk, that was my point.
If you had never lived, or if you stopped breathing and died the exact same amount of carbon dioxide would be in the atmosphere. Actually there would be more. So you have a 'duty' to keep living and keep all that carbon sequestered in your body tissues (if anything).
Comparing impacts is comparing ends. Not means and ends.
Pointing to something and saying "that's bad" isn't teaching morality. Teaching morality requires teaching philosophy, specifically ethics.
That proves nothing. If you free fifty million slaves overnight with no provision for how they would be taken care of / make a living you would get anarchy too. That does not mean slavery is necessary for civilization or that it is morally sound.
No, we just need a solution.
You may have noticed tickets to public transportation. This is the solution to the freeloader problem for public transportation.You may have noticed water delivery fees with meters. This is the solution to the freeloader problem for government supplied water.
Suppose that the answer is that there are no working examples. That does not mean it cannot work. There is always a first time.That does not mean slavery is moral or necessary (for cotton).
The diversity of civilizations throughout time and space give ample evidence of the fact that many of the things we call necessary public services are not necessary to have those services and that voluntary funding can be sufficient to maintain public order.
Push it to the extreme in the other direction:If warring clans are anarchy, then why not warring nations? "Special military actions" "Police actions", or whatever other nonsense they call all this constant killing.
Too little liberty = 60 million dead of starvation plus tens of millions more dead in a global struggle mostly featuring socialists who advertised their contempt for individual liberty
I do consider the industrial and technological revolutions of 1880 -> 1910 to be an example of positive correlation of economic liberty and prosperityIf that is what someone wants to call anarchy, then by their standards I am an anarchist
The means isn't a violation of rights. Taking a risk or doing something that could accumulate to a violation of rights is not a violation of rights regardless of the scale of that accumulation or risk, that was my point.Let's say your threshold is 1%. If you do something with a 1% chance of killing someone 100 times, how is that morally different than doing something with a 100% chance of killing someone once?
For example, starting a car company is statistically certain to lead to some deaths.
Doing something that will kill an average of 5 people doesn't seem better than doing something that will kill exactly 5 people.
If you had never lived, or if you stopped breathing and died the exact same amount of carbon dioxide would be in the atmosphere. Actually there would be more. So you have a 'duty' to keep living and keep all that carbon sequestered in your body tissues (if anything).This is not true. Population correlates with climate change [source].
Comparing impacts is comparing ends. Not means and ends.This would apply to taxes then too.
Wealth redistribution makes people poorer (an end) and some people richer (an end).
We're comparing ends in the trolley problem too. Maybe you're referring to the doctrine of double effect, but that gives a lot of leeway to utilitarians.
What you describe as "teaching morality" falls under education and could be funded by taxes.
But in our discussion on taxes, you were arguing that the government violating liberty would lead to anarchy.
So it sounds like you are arguing that we should accept anarchy to avoid government programs that might lead to anarchy. That comes across as self-defeating.
No, we just need a solution.If we don't have an immediate solution, we would have a period of anarchy.
You may have noticed tickets to public transportation. This is the solution to the freeloader problem for public transportation.You may have noticed water delivery fees with meters. This is the solution to the freeloader problem for government supplied water.Those do not cover police
or paving of communal roads.
And even if upper classes are provided for, some people will still be too poor to access those and will not be able to advance either.
An "everyone out for themself" system is anarchy, regardless of whether you think it is good or not.
Suppose that the answer is that there are no working examples. That does not mean it cannot work. There is always a first time.That does not mean slavery is moral or necessary (for cotton).Studies have shown that slavery decreased overall efficiency.
But policing does reduce crime, so an absence of policing would mean an increase in violence.
With slavery, we could see an alternative (factories) in places where slavery was nonexistent.
The diversity of civilizations throughout time shows that places without taxes lived in anarchy by today's standards.
Some places did have no government services, but that's what anarchy is.
Anarchy tends to indicate a much lower scale of organization or authority than the conflicts existing today.
People in most first-world countries do not live in fear of being dragged into war.
Even WW2 had a "home front" in the US that was largely immune from direct war casualties.
Too little liberty = 60 million dead of starvation plus tens of millions more dead in a global struggle mostly featuring socialists who advertised their contempt for individual libertyWell that's comparing anarchy on a small scale to socialism on a large scale. And this would be a good reason to not embrace either extreme,
rather than accepting a false dichotomy of socialism and government abolition.
That's an example of the success of market freedoms in regulated capitalist societies
regulated capitalist societies are not the same as government abolition